A Florida man named Edward Cocaine is facing -- you guessed it -- drug charges, forcing the judge overseeing his case in bond court to do a double take after reading his last name.

“How about, uh, Edward Cocaine? What?” Broward County Judge John Hurley said as he called the 34-year-old Fort Lauderdale man’s case in bond court, according to video of the proceedings obtained by the South Florida Sun-Sentinel.

In the video, a voice is then heard off camera, saying, “In fairness, we thought at first this might not be his given name.”

Next, Hurley asks Cocaine his last name, and he confidently exclaims, “My last name is Cocaine.”

The video shows Hurley speechless as an off-camera voice says, “It is on his driver’s license. I’m not saying he didn’t change it ... I don’t know.”

After chuckles reverberate across the courtroom, Cocaine says, “I’m used to it.”

“You know, I thought I’d seen it all,” Hurley says. “How many times have the police told you to step out of the car, sir, in your life?”

“No cocaine, Cocaine,” an off-camera voice warns the defendant. The comment elicited groans in the courtroom.

Broward County court records showed that Cocaine was charged Tuesday with possession of alprazolam, the generic name for Xanax, after a stop in Pembroke Pines, Fla. The charge is a third-degree felony.